
Safe Management of Shellfish and Harvest Waters : Minimizing Health Risks from Sewage-contaminated Shellfish.
Title:
Safe Management of Shellfish and Harvest Waters : Minimizing Health Risks from Sewage-contaminated Shellfish.
Author:
Rees, G.
ISBN:
9789240685413
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (358 pages)
Series:
Nonserial Publication
Contents:
CONTENTS -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Expert consensus -- 2. Bivalves: Global production and trade trends -- 3. Adverse health outcomes -- 4. Driving forces and risk management -- 5. Identification of primary sources of faecal pollution -- 6. Components of microbiological monitoring programmes -- 7. Real-time monitoring technologies for indicator bacteria and pathogens in shellfish and shellfish harvesting waters -- 8. Sanitary profiling of shellfish harvesting areas -- 9. Depuration and relaying -- 10. Overview of legislative principles and measures -- 11. Official control monitoring programmes for live bivalve molluscs -legislative and regulatory approaches: Scotland -- 12. Official control monitoring programmes for live bivalve molluscs -legislative and regulatory approaches: Canada -- 13. Official control monitoring programmes for live bivalve molluscs -legislative and regulatory approaches: New Zealand -- 14. Current management practices -- 15. Experience from recreational waters -- 16. Microbial modelling incoastal environments and early warning systems: useful tools to limit shellfish microbial contamination -- 17. Framework for change -- Index.
Abstract:
"Developed from an expert workshop convened by the World Health Organization and US Environmental Protection Agency, Safe Management of Shellfish and Harvest Waters provides a thorough review of the issues surrounding public health concerns associated with shellfish consumption. The trade and consumption of bivalve shellfish is a global industry and is increasing. Human illness caused by infectious agents transmitted through animal or human sources through shellfish consumption has been recognized for many years. It addresses contaminant sources and means of transmission to bivalve shellfish and where possible, identifies options to interrupt the cycle. The efficacy of current practices is discussed with the aid of case studies written by practitioners working in the field from a number of developed and developing countries. The need for the deployment of new approaches to protect human health from infectious diseases associated with the consumption of contaminated bivalve shellfish is discussed, focusing specifically on water management aspects and strategies. It provides valuable information on the real health risks posed by shellfish consumption. It distills worldwide experience; identifies the challenges and opportunities that face the industry and suggests responses to those challenges. It provides the scientific basis for regulation and associated monitoring and risk reduction programmes to enable health agencies, water quality and shellfish regulatory agencies and other stakeholders worldwide to control and reduce the existing and potential future infectious disease problems through better management of shellfish waters."--Publisher's description.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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